New  York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg marked the tenth anniversary on Wednesday of  his ban on smoking in bars and restaurants with a report saying the ban and  subsequent anti-smoking measures had prevented 10,000 premature deaths.
"Ten  years ago when New York City prohibited smoking in restaurants and bars, many  predicted the end of the hospitality, restaurant and tourism industries," Bloomberg  said in a statement.
"Yet  ten years later, fewer New Yorkers are smoking, we are living longer, our  industries are thriving and nobody longs for a return to smoke-filled bars and  restaurants."
Critics  of the move feared banning smoking would hurt the restaurant and bar business,  but the Health Department report said there are now some 6,000 more restaurants  and bars in the city than there were a decade ago.
The  city's Smoke-Free Air Act came into effect a little over a year into  Bloomberg's first term as mayor in 2003 and prohibited smoking inside bars,  restaurants and most workplaces.
The  following year, the city began providing free nicotine replacement therapy to  smokers trying to quit and in 2011 expanded the smoking ban to the city's parks  and beaches.
According  to the report released on Wednesday, the proportion of adult smokers dropped by  about a third to 15 percent in 2011 from 21.5 percent in 2002. The report,  released by the city's Health Department, also said the proportion of youths  under age 18 who smoke dropped by about half to 8.5 percent.
Bloomberg's  tenure, which will end this year, has been marked by his efforts to improve New  Yorkers' health by trying to induce them to eat less salt, trans fats and  calories in general, among other measures.
Bloomberg  has been criticized by some as paternalistic but his efforts have coincided  with an increase in New Yorkers' life expectancy, including a decline in  tobacco-related deaths.
Bloomberg's  attempt to limit the size of sugary drinks sold in the city was derailed this  month only hours before the new rules were to take effect when a judge ruled  that they were "arbitrary and capricious". The city is appealing that  decision.
A  week later, Bloomberg announced his plan to require shops to hide cigarettes  and tobacco products from public view, arguing that would shield young people  from marketing efforts.
Some  shop owners and cigarette manufacturers have criticized the plan as unnecessary  extra regulation that would infringe the free speech provision of the U.S.  Constitution.
Bloomberg  also proposed a minimum price of $10.50 for a pack of cigarettes, in the hope  that some smokers would find the habit too expensive to maintain. The two bills  are now before the city council.
Smoking  remains the leading preventable cause of premature death in the city, according  to the Health Department.
Ronald  Beyer, a professor of public health at Columbia University, called Bloomberg's  health initiatives a "major achievement" and said his efforts to make  smoking less socially acceptable were an effective and legitimate use of his  office.
He  said it remains an open question how much further government could go to  discourage smokers to quit.
FACEBOOK COMMENT